Armenian president appoints minister of town planning

Armenian president appoints minister of town planning

Mediamax news agency
9 Jun 04

Yerevan, 9 June: Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has signed
a decree appointing Aram Arutyunyan as Minister of Town Planning,
the presidential press service has told Mediamax news agency.

Before his appointment Aram Arutyunyan was an MP of the Armenian
National Assembly and member of the Orinats Yerkir [Law-Governed
Country] faction.

Member of the Orinats Yerkir Party Ara Aramyan resigned his post as
Minister of Town Planning on 9 April this year after the arrest of
his son, Ayk Aramyan.

Ayk Aramyan was arrested in connection with the shoot-out at Yerevan’s
Triumph cafe on 12 March as a result of which five people were
wounded. He was charged under three articles of the Armenian Criminal
Code: attempt on life, illegal possession of weapons and hooliganism.

BAKU: Seminar on “history of Azerbaijan culture” held

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan
June 8 2004

SEMINAR ON “HISTORY OF THE AZERBAIJAN CULTURE” HELD
[June 08, 2004, 22:28:03]

A Republican culturology seminar on the topic ” History of the
Azerbaijan culture”, organized by the International Cultural Center of
Civil Society, the Azerbaijan Society of Culturologists and Association
of Culture of Azerbaijan “Simurg” was held in the “Irshad” Hotel.

President of Association of Culture of Azerbaijan “Simurg “,
academician of the International Academy of Scientific Problems of
Intellectual Development Fuad Mammadov, having welcomed the visitors,
has noted, that the seminar is devoted to one of actual problems –
to the history of the Azerbaijan culture.

The doctor of historical sciences, corresponding member of the National
Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan (ANAS) Farida Mammadova spoke on the
topic “The Caucasian Albania: the history and the present”, in detail
told about the role and place of Albanian people in ethno-genesis of
Azerbaijan people, history of occurrence and falling of the Albanian
church, produced proofs of groundlessness of claims of the Armenians.

The report of the doctor of the art, collaborator of the Institute of
Architecture and Art of ANAS Jamil Hasanzade on the topic “The Tebriz
miniatures in world museums” has caused large interest and discussions.

Reproductions and slides which evidently illustrated the report, led
the visitors to the ÕØ-ÕVI centuries – the period of blossoming of
Tebriz school of miniatures and occurrence of the so-called pathetic
miniature which have made the whole stage in the history of the
Azerbaijan art.

Then, was held a “round table” during which the exchange of opinions
has taken place, discussed was the topic “Culture of Azerbaijan
yesterday, today, tomorrow”. Members of the World Association
of the non-governmental organizations, teachers, businessmen,
representatives of creative and trade unions, municipalities, the
religious organizations, mass media took part in the discussion.

Presentation on the Millennium Challenge Account

PRESS RELEASE

Armenian Network of America, Washington Region
P. O. Box 10423
Arlington, VA 22210-9998
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Washington, DC. The Armenian Network invites you to a presentation
on the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) and its implications
for Armenia. A senior representative from the Millennium Challenge
Corporation will explain the various features of MCAs and respond to
questions from the audience. MCAs are unique in that they represent
potential direct transfers of hundreds of millions of dollars and can
be used virtually in all spheres of economic and social development
(schools, hospitals, roads, power plants, private enterprises, among
others). Yet little is known about how funds will be programmed and
projects implemented.

The presentation is scheduled for Tuesday, June 22, 6:30-8:30pm. It
will take place at the World Bank Auditorium J1-050, 701 18th
Street, NW, Washington, DC 20433. The auditorium is located between
Pennsylvania Avenue and G Street, one block from the White House.

Representatives of the business community and NGOs are encouraged
to attend. RSVP to [email protected], while not required,
is appreciated.

The Armenian Network of America, Inc., is a 501(c)(3) non-profit
organization dedicated to the advancement of the Armenian American
community.

www.armnet.org

Spirited return for Armenian brandy

Spirited return for Armenian brandy
by Kieran Cooke, in Yerevan, Armenia

BBC News
June 8 2004

There is a right time and a wrong time to make foreign investments –
and Pierre Larretche, the French managing director of Armenia’s Yerevan
Brandy Company, thought he had made the biggest mistake of his career.

“A great drink”, says Mr Larretche

In the mid-90s Armenia, which had gained independence from the
old Soviet Union in 1991, embarked on a privatization programme of
state-run enterprises.

Mr Larretche, an executive with Pernod Ricard, the French drinks
conglomerate, was sent here from Paris to assess the potential of the
Yerevan Brandy Company, Armenia’s most prestigious business enterprise.

“On my recommendation Pernod Ricard paid $30m for the company” says
Mr Larretche.

“Immediately afterwards the rouble crisis happened and sales to Russia,
our main market, dropped by 75%. We suddenly had thousands of barrels
of unsold brandy on our hands.”

Revival

Fortunately for the Yerevan Brandy Company, Pernod Ricard and Mr
Larretche, the situation has changed dramatically.

Brandy production has risen from a low of 1.7 million litres in 1998
to 4 million litres last year. The Russian market, which accounts
for about 85% of exports, has revived.

In Armenia, a country of less than three million with few natural
resources and in which per capita annual incomes are less than $600
a year, foreign investors are scarce.

Pernod Ricard’s move into the country is a rare business success
story – but it has been a tough few years.

I wish I could earn more, but at least these days I have enough to
buy food – Hakob Karapetyan, Armenian grape grower

“At the beginning, there was a lot of local resentment about foreigners
gaining control of a company regarded with great pride by Armenians”
says Mr Larretche.

“We had to quickly demonstrate we were here to stay and not here to
simply asset strip the business.”

Court battle

The Yerevan Brandy Company, founded in 1887, had been starved of
investment in the later years of the Soviet period. Its main brand
name – “Ararat” – was being used by other brandy producers, mostly
in Russia.

Pernod Ricard, as the company’s new owners, had to undertake a series
of complex court cases to regain its brand exclusivity.

It also had to assure Armenia’s grape producers – poor farmers
dependent for survival on sales from their vines – that the company
would continue buying their produce.

“Despite the downturn in the market we kept on buying grapes” says
Mr Larretche.

“At one stage, due to ongoing production and lack of sales, we built
up more than 40 years inventory.”

‘A natural gift for business’

As what was once the Soviet market recovered – the Yerevan Brandy
Company sells mostly to Russia, Ukraine and Belarus – capital
investments were made to streamline the business. In 1998 the business
had only one computer – now there are 200.

The firm faced a battle to regain exclusivity over the Ararat brand
“Armenians are loyal workers and extremely capable managers” says
Mr Larretche. “They have a natural gift for business – out of 500
employees here only five are from France.”

Both to ensure the quality of brandy production and to protect local
grape farmers, the government brought in regulations five years ago
stipulating that only Armenian grapes can be used in the production
of Armenian brandy.

“This guarantees our brandy is uniquely Armenian” says Mr Larretche.
“But it has created a problem – now we are faced with a shortage of
grapes and local prices are rising.”

Financial security

Hakob Karapetyan tends grapes on his smallholding in the Ararat Valley,
Armenia’s main vine growing region.

In the early 90s – a time when Armenia was suffering acute economic
problems – Mr Karapetyan was forced to uproot his beloved vines and
plant vegetables so he and his family could survive.

As with many Armenian families, Mr Karapetyan’s two children had to
leave the country in search of jobs.

Life continues to be a struggle but at least Mr Karapetyan feels a
little more financially secure these days.

“In the old days, I had to take my grapes to the factory and accept
whatever price it gave me. Now we have long-term contracts and an
agreed minimum price.

“I wish I could earn more, but at least these days I have enough to
buy food.”

Mr Larretche is confident Armenian brandy can conquer other markets
besides its traditional ones in the old Soviet Union.

“At Yalta at the end of the second world war Churchill was so impressed
with Armenian brandy given to him by Stalin that he asked for several
cases of it to be sent to him each year.

“It’s a great drink – the equal of any in the world.”

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/3777007.stm

Giving New Democracies Counsel

Giving New Democracies Counsel
by Anitha Reddy, Washington Post Staff Writer

The Washington Post
June 7, 2004 Monday
Final Edition

Development Associates Inc., an Arlington consulting firm, won the
right to compete for work advising legislatures of young democracies.

Three other local companies — Financial Markets International Inc.
and Development Alternatives Inc., both of Bethesda, and Management
Systems International of Washington — won access to the contract,
which is administered by the U.S. Agency for International Development.

All four will now bid against each other for projects around the world,
typically worth less than $10 million each. The contract’s value,
for the companies combined, is capped at $100 million.

The consultants are usually hired for specific assignments and
include former state legislators and congressional representatives,
sociologists, software engineers and political science professors.
They work in teams, usually made up of about six people and led by a
few Americans, and counsel legislators on a wide range of practical
issues. The jobs usually last for three years.

In countries where the laborious process of updating laws is still
done by hand or with rudimentary software, “people don’t know what
laws are passed and they keep passing the same law over and over
again,” said Jack Sullivan, an executive at Development Associates
who oversees legislative consulting projects. To solve that problem,
the teams set up computer systems and teach legislative staff how to
enter laws and pending bills into databases.

The consultants also teach parliamentary research staff members how to
respond to legislators’ requests, such as a summary of laws on a given
topic. They also edit early drafts of legislation and show lawmakers’
staffs how to write laws briefly and clearly.

The advisers also give courses in political jockeying. In Armenia,
consultants from Development Associates are counseling the legislature
on how to assert itself in contests with the executive branch. That’s
a tricky issue in unstable democracies where a powerful executive
frequently overwhelms the legislators. One suggestion: Call more
members of the executive branch before the legislature to explain
their actions in formal hearings.

“In many of these systems, the legislatures are rubber stamps for
the executive branch and many would like not to be,” Sullivan said.

Cafesjian, Junior Achievement, Orran,Armenia TV Team Up To Celebrate

IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Junior Achievement of Armenia
4/6 Saryan street,
Yerevan 375009, Armenia
Tel: (+374 – 1) 54.49.96
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

June 2, 2004

CAFESJIAN, JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT, ORRAN, ARMENIA TV TEAM UP TO CELEBRATE
CHILDREN’S DAY

Yerevan–“Children for Children” was the theme on June 1 at the
Gerard L. Cafesjian Center for the Arts, known here as the Cascade,
where International Children’s Day celebrations and lessons about
love and benevolence went hand in hand.

The festivities began in the early evening with circus acts,
puppet shows, and dance and song performances from the Karakert
Village Dance Troupe as well as many other groups from across the
Republic. Thousands of children participated in games, activities,
and spontaneous performances throughout the night.

The children, their families, and visiting guests and dignitaries
were treated to a live late-night concert, with the country’s most
popular singers such as Nune Yesayan, Shushan Petrosian, Alla Levonian,
Arthur Ispirian, and many others filling the air with Armenian song
and soul. A spectacular fireworks show concluded a festival that was
unprecedented in its scope and dimension.

The real success, however, was in the message of the day. Organized by
the Cafesjian Family Foundation, Junior Achievement of Armenia, Orran
Benevolent Union, and Armenia TV with the intention of promoting the
spirit of giving, the partners reached out to Armenia’s most promising
group of children: Junior Achievers.

Junior Achievement of Armenia, an affiliate of Junior Achievement
worldwide, assists high school students in learning about all aspects
of running a business. From marketing to production and distribution,
these students study and put into practice the ABC’s of free market
economics.

While the nation celebrated one of its happiest days of the year,
Junior Achievers decided in their turn to help other children
in need, and in particular the young beneficiaries of Orran, an
organization that assists vagrant children. As part of the Children’s
Day celebration along the Cascade, over thirty of the most active
Junior Achievement classrooms from Armenia’s schools decided to hold
a public sale of hand-made goods and wares and to donate all profits
for the day to charity organizations devoted to children.

Armine K. Hovannisian, executive director of Junior Achievement of
Armenia and founder of Orran, summed up the meaning of the day:
“We wanted the children to have a great festival and to enjoy
themselves. We also wanted to create the opportunity for them to show
off the results of their many months of labor and to make a public
statement about caring and helping those who are less fortunate.”

What turned out to be a festive occasion with thousands of smiling
children was in fact a lesson of benevolence which needs to be
practiced not only in Yerevan but throughout the Armenian world.

For more information, visit the Cafesjian Family Foundation at
; Junior Achievement of Armenia at ;
and Orran Children’s Center [or Orran Benevolent Union] at

www.jaarmenia.org
www.cmf.am
www.jaarmenia.org
www.orran.am

BAKU: Azeri private radio scraps some BBC relays in protest at”biase

Azeri private radio scraps some BBC relays in protest at “biased” reports

BBC Monitoring research
2 Jun 04

The Baku-based Azerbaijani commercial FM station ANS CM has suspended
transmission of BBC programmes in Russian to Central Asia and the
Caucasus at 0700 local time (0200 gmt). On 1 and 2 June, the BBC output
was replaced by continuous music and station identification jingles.

A statement by the company, ANS CM, which has been rebroadcasting BBC
World Service output for the last 10 years, said it had stopped the
transmission because of what it called the biased BBC reporting on
the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. The BBC denied the accusations and
expressed regret over the decision. In a statement, the BBC said that
it has remained committed to providing fair, impartial and balanced
coverage of events in the region.

ANS TV, operated by the same company as the radio station, reported on
1 June that ANS CM radio would not broadcast the Russian programmes
in Azerbaijan because “the morning programmes of this service of the
BBC and the programmes by producer Mark Grigoryan are distorting the
truth about the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict”.

A deadline of 1 June was reported on the air by ANS TV on 24 May,
by which the BBC was to have addressed the issues raised by ANS in
letters sent to the BBC since 6 April.

ANS TV has carried regular criticism since 12 May about BBC Russian
programming for the region and BBC web pages in Russian which dealt
with the 10th anniversary of the cease-fire in the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict. Similar critical reports were aired to a lesser extent by
some other Baku-based commercial TV stations. Azerbaijani press and
news agency reporting of the affair has been more muted.

On 31 May the head of the presidential administration, Ramiz Mehdiyev,
told Azartac news agency that a visit by a BBC correspondent
to Nagornyy Karabakh, without the permission of the Azerbaijani
authorities and in violation of Azerbaijani laws, had caused some
discontent. However, since freedom of the press is protected in
Azerbaijan, he said it would be unacceptable to take sanctions against
the radio station or to take it off the air.

ANS CM radio on 102 FM did rebroadcast the BBC Azeri Service at 1700
gmt on 1 June as scheduled. The dedicated BBC FM relay for Baku on
103.3 FM, which carries BBC World Service in English, the Central
Asia and the Caucasus Service in Russian and Azeri, as well as the
BBC Turkish Service and some British domestic programming, continued
to operate as scheduled.

A Former Superpower’s Hazardous Legacy

The Washington Post
May 26, 2004 Wednesday

Final Edition

A Former Superpower’s Hazardous Legacy;
Experts Cite Risks of Aging and Unsecured Arms Caches in Ex-Soviet
Republics

by Peter Baker, Washington Post Foreign Service

KUTAISI, Georgia — Just beyond the rusted wire fence with gaping
holes and the teenage guards wearing slippers, dozens of napalm bombs
lay in the tall grass.

Nearby were canisters of land mines stacked in the open air, rotting
crates of ammunition for antiaircraft batteries, ancient guided
missiles and piles upon piles of various types of bombs. Stacked in
a nearby warehouse were thousands of launchers for shoulder-fired
rockets.

Once a bristling outpost of a global superpower, the former Red Army
base near here has deteriorated into a weedy munitions junkyard,
one of hundreds of aging, relatively unprotected stockpiles scattered
throughout the former Soviet Union. While the United States has focused
on securing potential weapons of mass destruction in this part of the
world, some security experts increasingly say conventional arsenals
may be dangerously vulnerable to theft as well.

Millions of tons of armaments were left behind in depots like the
one in Kutaisi when the Russian military largely withdrew from the
14 former Soviet republics that became independent from Moscow more
than a decade ago. Some of these bases have since served as one-stop
shopping centers for black-market arms traders who have little trouble
sneaking in or bribing guards to let them pass.

“The situation in my opinion is extremely bad,” said Yura Krikheli,
deputy director of the Gamma Center, a Georgian government institute
charged with securing arms caches. “Georgia lies in a very dangerous
location. If we consider what countries we border, then anything can
happen. There’s a danger of terrorists coming and people stealing
things and taking them to conflict zones.”

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), a
regional grouping of 55 countries, has cited “huge risks” associated
with the weapons stockpiles. Foreign ministers from the member
countries last December approved a plan to secure and destroy many
of those weapons to stop “illicit diversion and uncontrolled spread
especially to terrorist and criminal groups.”

The corroding bombs and ammunition also pose a growing risk to the
environment and to the communities near the stockpiles. An explosion
at an old Soviet arms depot in Ukraine this month, possibly caused
by a cigarette, touched off about two weeks of secondary blasts and
fires that were extinguished only last week. Five people were killed
and 10,000 were evacuated; more than 2,000 buildings were damaged
or destroyed.

In 2001, a series of depots containing artillery shells left over from
the Soviet war in Afghanistan exploded in Kazakhstan, prompting the
evacuation of 1,000 soldiers and residents from a six-mile danger zone.

The problem exists in Russia as well. In the eastern port city of
Vladivostok, two officers were killed and five soldiers were injured
last August when a munitions facility exploded. It was the fourth major
fire at Pacific Fleet arsenals since the demise of the Soviet Union,
despite politicians’ demands that ammunition warehouses be moved away
from residential areas. Similar explosions have occurred in the Samara,
Sverdlovsk and Buryatia regions in the last six years.

Here in Georgia, a warehouse at a military base exploded in 1996
and forced the evacuation of tens of thousands of people for a
week, according to military experts, who fear that it could happen
again. “If there’s an explosion, there’ll be a chain reaction of
explosions,” said Imanual Yakov an Israeli consultant hired by the
Georgians. “There’ll be unbelievable damage.”

It is the fear of terrorists and guerrillas, though, that has generated
a new drive by officials in this mountainous country to address the
long-neglected danger.

The Russians still maintain two bases in Georgian-administered
territory, but in the 1990s, as part of the dissolution of the Soviet
Union, the newly constituted Georgian army was given control of more
than 30 Soviet bases, spread across a country smaller than South
Carolina. Many contain thousands of tons of unneeded arms, which are
guarded by little more than fragile fences.

“It’s a legitimate issue because we inherited from the Soviets a
huge infrastructure,” Defense Minister Gela Bezhuashvili said in an
interview. “Posts are spread all over Georgia. They need to be cleared
of mines.” Georgian officials said they had received virtually no
help from the Russians with these or other crucial tasks.

A recent tour of four bases in different parts of the country provided
a glimpse of the exposure. An arsenal in the capital, Tbilisi, was
surrounded by barbed wire that had been pulled apart at points so
intruders could easily come and go. At a base outside Tbilisi, the
fencing was so ineffective that cows, pigs, horses and mangy dogs
wandered in and out unimpeded.

The base near Kutaisi has no lights to illuminate its 31/2-mile
perimeter at night because it has no electricity from midnight to 7
a.m. But that’s better than another base in central Georgia that has
no electricity at all.

“It’s very difficult for the soldiers to defend this place,” said
Col. Tomas Gagua as he showed visitors around the Tbilisi base. “We
need lights, we need signalization.”

Those able to get in would find a smorgasbord of weaponry. Probably
most useful to terrorists or guerrillas would be the SA-7 Strela
shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles or the similar Igla missiles.
In addition, S-5 57mm and S-8 80mm missiles, with a range of three
to five miles and normally fired from warplanes, can be modified into
shoulder-fired weapons, military officers said. Similar missiles were
launched from donkey carts at hotels and the Iraqi Oil Ministry in
Baghdad last year.

There are also thousands of land mines, burlap bags filled with
raw explosives, crates of ammunition, mortars and Alazan missiles.
“Everything that lies here should be worried about,” said Capt. Zaza
Khvedelidze, deputy commander at one base.

In many cases, there are no inventories, so if anything is taken it
might not be missed. It is unclear how much has been pilfered over
the years, but some officers said they suspected Georgian arms have
wound up in the hands of paramilitary forces in the separatist regions
of Ajaria, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, as well as the territory of
Nagorno-Karabakh, claimed by both Armenia and Azerbaijan, and the
war-torn Russian republic of Chechnya.

“Everything’s possible. Nothing’s impossible,” said Maj. Paatu
Enukidze, chief of staff at the Tbilisi base. Soldiers earn just
$50 a month and sometimes have to wear civilian clothes because no
uniforms are available, so they are susceptible to payoffs. “For
$1,000 to $1,500,” said Enukidze, “you can buy anything.”

At the base near Kutaisi, army officials reported thwarting two
attempts to steal rocket parts and gunpowder in the last year,
one of them by local police officers. Maj. Guram Chinaladze, the
base commander, expressed confidence no one had gotten away with any
weapons. But he added, “All the weapons kept here are really dangerous,
and we’re really trying to secure them.”

At the request of the Georgian government, the OSCE last year began
a program to recycle and destroy stockpiles of munitions. So far,
officials reported that they have dismantled 13,000 rounds of artillery
and antiaircraft ammunition and by next month expect to have destroyed
nearly 500 air-dropped bombs, 47 ground-to-air missiles and another
2,000 antiaircraft shells.

But the OSCE estimated that the Georgians still have more than 1
million antiaircraft shells, among other ordnance. Officials are
seeking funds from OSCE member states to continue the disposal program
until next year.

The Georgians are also working with Imanual Yakov’s Israeli-Spanish
firm to improve security at their bases and destroy as many of the
arms caches as possible. But in an impoverished country, funds remain
short. Georgia’s national security adviser, Ivane Merabishvili, last
month sent Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld a letter seeking
$6.5 million.

“They don’t have the money,” said Lenny Ben-David, a former Israeli
diplomat lobbying in Washington for the Georgians’ request. “If a
power like the United States would come in, it could be taken care
of. Otherwise it’s going to come back and bite them.”

FIDH : La Turquie doit traduire ses =?UNKNOWN?Q?r=E9formes_en?= vue

NEWS Press
18 mai 2004

FIDH : La Turquie doit traduire ses réformes en vue de l’adhésion à
l’UE par une action concrète en matière de droits de l’Homme

FIDH Fédération Internationale des ligues des droits de l’homme

À l’occasion du Conseil d’association UE/Turquie du 18 mai 2004, la
FIDH souhaite manifester son inquiétude quant à la situation des
droits de l’Homme en Turquie, et attirer l’attention sur plusieurs
sujets alarmants, afin d’en faire une priorité dans les débats au
sein du présent Conseil.

Certes, le gouvernement turc met indéniablement en place une
politique intense de réformes législatives en vue la reprise de
l’acquis communautaire, préalable à l’adhésion à l’Union européenne.
Outre sept « paquets » de réformes politiques et une activité
législative intense durant ces derniers mois, le Parlement turc a
ratifié plusieurs traités internationaux et européens, tels que le
Pacte international relatif aux droits civils et politiques, le Pacte
international relatif aux droits économiques, sociaux et culturels ou
encore le Protocole n° 6 à la CEDH.

Si la FIDH accueille avec soulagement ces avancées, elle s’interroge
cependant sur les conditions de la mise en oeuvre de ces engagements,
et demeure vivement préoccupée par la situation de nombreux droits
fondamentaux qui continuent d’être systématiquement violés en
Turquie. La situation des défenseurs des droits de l’Homme Les
défenseurs des droits de l’Homme continuent de souffrir de nombreuses
formes de répression en Turquie, au mépris de la Déclaration de
l’Assemblée générale des Nations unies de 1998 sur les défenseurs des
droits de l’Homme : obstacles à l’enregistrement et fermetures
d’associations, perquisitions illégales et saisines de documents,
campagnes de diffamation, menaces et intimidations… Surtout, on
assiste à un accroissement dramatique du recours à la justice aux
fins de sanctionner les défenseurs. Ceux qui osent dénoncer les
violations perpétrées à l’encontre des Kurdes demeurent
particulièrement visés.

La persistance des actes de torture La FIDH dénonce les pratiques de
torture et de traitements inhumains et dégradants commis en Turquie
par la police et les gendarmes. Malgré l’engagement de l’État à mener
une politique de « tolérance zéro » à l’égard de la torture, la
pratique de la torture n’est pas en diminution, loin de là. Elle
prend des formes plus « sophistiquées » et difficilement décelable,
surtout dans les lieux de détention et sur la personne des opposants
politiques. L’impunité des auteurs d’actes de torture persiste. La
justice et l’État de droit Plusieurs changements législatifs ont
contribué à renforcer l’efficacité du système judiciaire turc, mais
certaines de ses caractéristiques demeurent très préoccupantes. Le
maintien des Cours de sûreté de l’État, le non-respect du droit à un
procès juste et équitable, l’inexistence de tribunaux d’appel ou
encore l’inapplication des décisions de la CEDH sont autant
d’éléments qui détournent la Turquie de l’État de droit.

Les conditions de détention De trop nombreux cas de violations des
droits des détenus persistent en Turquie. Malgré les récentes
réformes, l’accès à un avocat n’est toujours pas garanti pour les
personnes en détention préventive et des cas d’intimidation des
détenus et de leurs avocats sont signalés. Dans les provinces du
Sud-Est du pays, et particulièrement dans les prisons de type E et F,
les violations se multiplient. Le problème des minorités La Turquie a
fait quelques avancées en matière de traitement des minorités
nationales ou religieuses. Ces avancées restent cependant limitées
(la Turquie évite en outre tout engagement international concernant
les minorités) et illusoires, puisqu’en pratique la situation des
minorités, en particulier des Kurdes, reste dramatique. Les minorités
se voient déniés leurs droits fondamentaux, et notamment les droits
culturels.

La FIDH condamne également la politique de négation menée par les
autorités turques concernant le génocide arménien, et appelle la
Turquie à se conformer à la résolution du Parlement européen du 18
juin 1987 sur la question arménienne. La fragilisation de la société
civile Les libertés d’association, d’expression et de réunion, en
dépit de certains assouplissements, demeurent particulièrement
contrôlées en Turquie et participent au musellement de la société
civile. Leurs restrictions sont utilisées pour faire taire, en
particulier, les défenseurs des droits de l’Homme, les minorités,
ainsi que les opposants politiques. De plus la législation turque,
même lorsqu’elle est révisée, n’empêche souvent pas des pratiques peu
compatibles avec les dispositions du Pacte international relatif aux
droits civils et politiques et de la CEDH.

Tehran: Iran Seeks Inlets to Armenia’s New Energy Markets

Iran Seeks Inlets to Armenia’s New Energy Markets

Tehran Times
May 20 2004

TEHRAN (PIN) — A member of Sadid Saba Nirou Company’s board of
directors stated that Energy Ministry sought more cooperation with
Armenia in the field of wind energy.

Shahram Aminian told Petroenergy Information Network that Iran was
capable of exporting technical know-how to neighboring countries.

He noted that Iran – Armenia negotiations in this regard had not been
finalized, but the Energy Ministry is following up the issue.

“We cannot directly interact with other countries in the field of
wind energy and we are looking forward to Energy Ministry to take
measures,” he said.

The official said Iran enjoyed technical know-how to build wind
turbines and was capable of exported relevant services to other
countries.